Technical field
[0002] The present disclosure relates to the field of semiconductor technology, and in particular
to a wafer, a manufacturing method thereof and a semiconductor device.
Background
[0003] With the development of integrated circuit (IC) technology, the integration level
of IC chips is getting ever higher, single-wafer chips can no longer meet the requirements,
therefore stacked chips built on multiple wafers have become more widely used. Stacked
chips are built by dicing through multi-stacked wafers.
[0004] A multi-stacked wafer includes die areas and dicing areas. The die areas may be damaged
due to the stress of the dicing operation in the dicing areas. In order to ensure
that the die areas are not damaged during dicing, relatively large dicing areas are
applied currently. However, the large dicing area results in a reduction in the effective
utilization of the wafer and thus an increase in chip cost.
[0005] It should be noted that the information disclosed in the above background section
is only used to enhance the understanding of the background of the present disclosure,
therefore may include information that does not constitute the information known to
those of ordinary skill in the art.
Summary
[0006] The present disclosure provides a wafer, a manufacturing method thereof and a semiconductor
device, thereby overcoming the problems caused by the limitations and defects of related
techniques.
[0007] According to a first aspect of the present disclosure, a wafer manufacturing method
is provided, which includes: providing a wafer body, on which a scribe lane for dicing
is provided; and forming crack-stopping through-silicon-vias on a side portion of
the scribe lane, wherein the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias are filled with a
protective material.
[0008] In some examples, said forming the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias on a side
portion of the scribe lane includes the steps of: forming blind vias on the side portion
of the scribe lane from a first surface of the wafer body; filling the protective
material into the blind vias; and thinning the wafer body from a second surface opposite
to the first surface of the wafer body until the blind vias are exposed.
[0009] In some examples, said forming the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias on a side
portion of the scribe lane includes the steps of: forming first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
on a side portion of a scribe lane of a first wafer body; filling the protective material
into the first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias; forming second crack-stopping
through-silicon-vias on a side portion of a scribe lane of a second wafer body at
positions aligned with the first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias, wherein the
first wafer body and the second wafer body are stacked; and filling the protective
material into the second crack-stopping through-silicon-vias.
[0010] In some examples, said forming the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias on a side
portion of the scribe lane includes forming the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
on both sides along an extension direction of the scribe lane.
[0011] In some examples, the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias include continuously distributed
or separately distributed through-silicon-vias.
[0012] In some examples, two or more rows of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias are
formed on one side of the scribe lane.
[0013] In some examples, a width of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias is in a range
from 2 microns to 20 microns, and a depth of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
is in a range from 15 microns to 150 microns.
[0014] In some examples, the protective material includes one or more selected from copper,
tungsten, aluminum, tantalum, titanium, tantalum nitride, titanium nitride, silicon
oxide, silicon nitride, silicon oxynitride, silicon carbide, silicon carbonitride,
polyimide and tetraethyl orthosilicate.
[0015] In some examples, an air gap is provided in one of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias.
[0016] According to a second aspect of the present disclosure, a wafer is provided which
includes: a wafer body, on which a scribe lane for dicing is provided; and crack-stopping
through-silicon-vias provided on a side portion of the scribe lane and filled with
a protective material.
[0017] In some examples, the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias are formed on both sides
along an extension direction of the scribe lane.
[0018] In some examples, the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias include continuously distributed
or separately distributed through-silicon-vias.
[0019] In some examples, the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias are formed to two or more
rows on one side of the scribe lane.
[0020] In some examples, a width of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias is in a range
from 2 microns to 20 microns, and a depth of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
is in a range from 15 microns to 150 microns.
[0021] In some examples, the protective material includes one or more selected from copper,
tungsten, aluminum, tantalum, titanium, tantalum nitride, titanium nitride, silicon
oxide, silicon nitride, silicon oxynitride, silicon carbide, silicon carbonitride,
polyimide and tetraethyl orthosilicate.
[0022] In some examples, an air gap is provided in one of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias.
[0023] In a third aspect of the disclosure, a semiconductor device is provided which includes
two or more layers of wafers described above, in which said two or more layers of
wafers are stacked.
[0024] It should be understood that the above general description and the following detailed
description are only exemplary and explanatory, and cannot limit the present disclosure.
Brief Description of the drawings
[0025] The drawings that are incorporated into the specification and constitute a part of
the specification show the examples of the present disclosure, and explain the principle
of the disclosure together with the specification. The drawings in the following description
show only some examples of the present disclosure. For those of ordinary skill in
the art, other drawings can be obtained based on these drawings without creative work.
FIG. 1 is a flowchart of a first wafer manufacturing method according to an exemplary
example of the present disclosure.
FIG. 2 is a flowchart of a second wafer manufacturing method according to an exemplary
example of the present disclosure.
FIG. 3 is a flowchart of a third wafer fabrication method according to an exemplary
example of the present disclosure.
FIG. 4 is a schematic top view of a wafer according to an exemplary example of the
present disclosure.
FIG. 5 is a schematic cross-sectional view of a wafer according to an exemplary example
of the present disclosure.
FIGs. 6 to 9 show process diagrams for forming the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
according to an exemplary example of the present disclosure.
FIGs. 10 and 11 show process diagrams for forming the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
according to a further exemplary example of the present disclosure.
FIG. 12 is a schematic diagram of the distribution of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
according to an exemplary example of the present disclosure.
FIG. 13 is a schematic diagram of a crack-stopping through-silicon-via according to
an exemplary example of the present disclosure.
FIG. 14 is a schematic diagram of the distribution of the type of crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
according to a further exemplary example of the present disclosure.
[0026] The following list shows the reference numerals in the figures:
100, wafer body; 110, die region; 120, scribe lane; 200, crack-stopping through-silicon-via;
210, blind via; 230, first crack-stopping through-silicon-via; 240, second crack-stopping
through-silicon-via; 250, air gap; 20, protective material layer; 300, first wafer
body; 400, second wafer body.
Detailed Description
[0027] Exemplary examples will now be described more fully with reference to the accompanying
drawings. However, the exemplary examples can be implemented in various forms, and
should not be construed as being limited to the examples set forth herein; on the
contrary, these examples are provided so that the present invention will be comprehensive
and complete, and fully convey the concept of the exemplary examples to those skilled
in the art. The same reference numeral in the figures represents the same or similar
structures, and thus their detailed descriptions will be omitted.
[0028] Although the terms of relative positions such as "upper" and "lower" are used in
this specification to describe the relative relationship of one component to another,
these terms are used in this specification only for convenience according to for example,
the exemplary directions shown in the drawings. It can be understood that if a device
of a figure is turned upside down, the component described as "upper" will become
the "lower" component. When a certain structure is "on" another structure, it may
mean that the certain structure is integrally formed on said structure, or that the
certain structure is "directly" arranged on said structure, or that the certain structure
is "indirectly" arranged on said structure with an inserted structure therebetween.
[0029] The terms "one", "a", "the", "said" and "at least one" are used to indicate the presence
of one or more elements/components/etc. The terms "include/including" and "have/having"
are used to indicate open-ended inclusive, and mean that in addition to the listed
elements/components/etc., there may be other elements/components/etc.. The terms "first",
"second" and "third" are only used as a label, not a limit to the number of objects.
[0030] Firstly, the exemplary examples provide a wafer manufacturing method. As shown in
FIG. 1, the wafer manufacturing method may include the following steps:
step S110, providing a wafer body 100 with a scribe lane 120 for dicing; and
step S120, crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200 are formed on a side portion of
the scribe lane 120, and the through-silicon-vias are filled with a protective material.
[0031] In the wafer manufacturing method provided in the examples of the disclosure, by
providing crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200 that are filled with the protective
material on both sides of the scribe lane 120, the damage of the die region 110 caused
by the dicing stress is prevented during wafer dicing. The crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
200 can effectively reduce the width of the scribe lane 120 and facilitate miniaturization
of the scribe lane 120, thereby improving the effective wafer utilization.
[0032] In step S110, as shown in FIG. 5, the wafer body 100 may be divided into the scribe
lanes 120 and the die regions 110, and during dicing, a dicing knife acts on the scribe
lanes 120 while the die regions 110 are untouched. The wafer body 100 may include
a silicon based substrate such as a silicon epitaxial wafer, silicon-on-insulator,
etc., or a substrate of other semiconductor material such as GaN, and the substrate
may be an intrinsic semiconductor substrate, or N-type doped or P-type doped semiconductor
substrate, which is not specifically limited in the present disclosure. A dielectric
layer may be provided on the substrate, and the material of the dielectric layer may
be one or more of silicon oxide, silicon nitride, or silicon oxynitride. The dielectric
layer may be formed by a method such as chemical vapor deposition, atomic layer deposition,
or the like, in specific implementations. It is understood that the dielectric layer
may be one layer of insulating material, or may be stacked layers of the same or different
insulating materials.
[0033] In a feasible implementation manner provided by the examples of the present disclosure,
step S120 may comprise the following steps as shown in FIG. 2:
step S210, blind vias 210 are formed on a side portion of the scribe lane 120 on a
first surface of the wafer body 100;
step S220, the blind vias 210 are filled with a protective material; and
step S230, a second surface opposite to the first surface of the wafer body 100 is
thinned until the blind vias 210 are exposed.
[0034] In step S210, as shown in FIG. 6, the blind vias 210 are formed on a side portion
of the scribe lane 120 from the first surface of the wafer body 100. Herein the blind
vias 210 may be formed by dry etching, wet etching, laser etching, or dry and wet
combined etching. For example, the dry etching may be reactive ion etching or inductively
coupled plasma etching, and the wet etching may use hydrofluoric acid solution, hydrofluoric
acid buffered etching solution, potassium hydroxide solution, or TMAH solution. The
blind vias 210 are located at a side portion of the scribe lane 120 having the cross
section of a rectangular or trapezoidal shape.
[0035] It should be noted that the positions of the blind vias 210 can be defined by a photoresist,
which can be coated on the first side of the wafer body 100, exposed with a corresponding
photomask to transfer the pattern of the photomask to the photoresist, and developed
such that the photoresist layer exposes the regions where the crack-stopping through-silicon
vias 200 are to be formed; and the blind vias 210 are then formed by etching.
[0036] In step S220, as shown in FIG. 7, a protective material may be filled in the blind
hole 210. The protective material may be one or more of conductive materials such
as copper, tungsten, aluminum, tantalum, titanium, tantalum nitride, titanium nitride
and the like. Before the protective material, an insulating layer may be deposited
on the first surface of the wafer body 100 and on the inside walls of the blind hole
210. For example, the insulating layer can be formed by chemical vapor deposition,
physical vapor deposition, or thermal growth. The above-mentioned conductive material
then fills in the blind hole 210, by electroplating, for example. In electroplating,
a seed layer is first deposited on the insulating layer, and a metal protective layer
is electroplated on the seed layer. During the electroplating process, a metal layer
is also formed on the first surface of the wafer body 100, as shown in FIG. 8, which
needs to be removed by such as etching or chemical mechanical polishing.
[0037] When the filling material is one or more of silicon oxide, silicon nitride, silicon
oxynitride, silicon carbide, silicon carbonitride, polyimide, and tetraethyl orthosilicate,
it may be filled with a process of chemical vapor deposition or physical vapor deposition
or thermal growth. At the same time, as shown in FIG. 7, a protective material layer
20 is also formed on the first surface of the wafer body 100. The protective material
layer 20 can be removed or not removed according to actual needs. Further, as shown
in FIG. 13, an air gap 250 may be formed inside the protective material filled in
the blind via 210.
[0038] In step S230, as shown in FIG. 9, the second surface of the wafer body 100 is thinned
until the blind vias 210 are exposed. The second surface of the wafer body 100 which
is opposite to the first surface may be thinned by etching or chemical mechanical
polishing. For example, the first surface of the wafer body 100 may be the front side
of the wafer body 100, and the second side is the back side of the wafer body 100.
[0039] In a feasible implementation method provided by the example of the present disclosure,
as shown in FIG. 3, step S120 may include:
step S310, forming first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 230 on a side portion
of a scribe line 120 on a first wafer body 300;
step S320, filling the first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 230 with a protective
material;
step S330, forming second crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 240 on a side portion
of a scribe lane 120 on a second wafer body 400 that is stacked with the first wafer
body 300, at positions which align to the first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
230; and
step S340, filling the protective material in the second crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
240.
[0040] In step S310, as shown in FIG. 10, the first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
230 may be formed on the side portion of the scribe line 120 on the first wafer body
300. In the case of multiple layers of stacked wafers, the process is rather complicated
in which blind vias 210 may be firstly formed on each of the wafer bodies, then the
wafer bodies 100 are thinned after filling the vias with the protective material and
lastly bonded together to form the multiple layers of stacked wafers. Therefore, a
process may be adopted, in which a two-wafer stack structure is formed first, and
then crack-stopping through-silicon-vias are formed on each of the wafer bodies 100.
This process can simplify the manufacturing process and improve the production efficiency.
For example, the two-wafer stack structure includes the first wafer body 300 and the
second wafer body 400 that are stacked together. The first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
230 may be formed on the first wafer body 300 to expose the second wafer 400. The
first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 230 are filled with a protective material.
Then second crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 240, which respectively align exactly
to the first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 230 may be formed on the surface
of the second wafer body 400 to expose the first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
230., Then the second crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 240 are filled with the
protective material. This process omits the thinning step, therefore it simplifies
the manufacturing process.
[0041] The first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 230 may be formed by dry etching, wet
etching, laser etching, or combined dry and wet etching. For example, the dry etching
may be the reactive ion etching or the inductively coupled plasma etching, and the
wet etching may be etching with hydrofluoric acid solution, hydrofluoric acid buffered
etching solution, potassium hydroxide solution, or TMAH solution. The first crack-stopping
through-silicon-vias 230 are located at the side of the scribe line 120 having the
cross section of rectangular or trapezoidal shape.
[0042] It should be noted that the positions of the first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
230 may be defined by a photoresist which is coated on the surface of the first wafer
body 300, exposed with a corresponding mask to transfers the pattern of the mask to
the photoresist layer; and developed to expose the regions where the first crack-stopping
through-silicon-vias 230 are to be formed and the first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
230 are then formed by etching.
[0043] In step S320, a protective material may be filled in the first crack-stopping through-silicon-via
230. The protective material may be one or more of the conductive materials such as
copper, tungsten, aluminum, tantalum, titanium, tantalum nitride and titanium nitride.
At this time, before the protective material, a layer of insulating material may be
formed on the walls of the first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 230 and on the
surface of the wafer body 100 as well. The insulating layer may be formed, for example,
by chemical vapor deposition, physical vapor deposition or thermal growth. The above-mentioned
conductive material may be filled in the first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
230, for example, by electroplating. First, a seed layer is deposited on the surface
of the insulating layer, and then a metal protective layer is electroplated on the
seed layer. During the electroplating process, the metal layer is also formed on the
surface of the wafer body 100, and the metal layer needs to be removed, for example,
by etching or chemical mechanical polishing.
[0044] When the filling material is one or more of silicon oxide, silicon nitride, silicon
oxynitride, silicon carbide, silicon carbonitride, polyimide, and tetraethyl orthosilicate,
it may be filled in by such as chemical vapor deposition, physical vapor deposition
or thermal growth. At the same time, a protective material layer 20 is also formed
on the surface of the first wafer body 300. At this time, the protective material
layer 20 may be removed or may not be removed according to actual needs. Further,
an air gap 250 may be formed within the protective material filled in the first crack-stopping
through-silicon-via 230.
[0045] In step S330, as shown in FIG. 11, the second crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
240 respectively aligning to the first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 230 may
be formed on the side portion of the scribe lane 120 on the second wafer body 400.
Herein, the second crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 240 may be formed by dry etching,
wet etching, laser etching, or dry and wet combined etching. For example, the dry
etching may be the reactive ion etching or the inductively coupled plasma etching,
and the wet etching may be etching with a potassium hydroxide solution. The second
crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 240 are located on the side of the scribe line
120and the cross-section of the second crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 240 may
be rectangular or trapezoidal.
[0046] It should be noted that the position of the second crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
240 can be defined by a photoresist which is coated on the surface of the second wafer
body 400, exposed with a corresponding photomask to transfer the pattern of the mask
to the photoresist layer; and developed to expose the regions where the second crack-stopping
through-silicon-vias 240 are to be formed; and the second crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
240 is then formed by etching.
[0047] In step S340, the second crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 240 are filled with
the protective material. The protective material may be one or more of the conductive
materials such as copper, tungsten, aluminum, tantalum, titanium, tantalum nitride
and titanium nitride. At this time, before the protective material is filled in, a
layer of insulating material may be formed on the walls of the second crack-stopping
through-silicon-vias 240 and on the surface of the wafer body 100 as well. The insulating
layer may be formed, for example, by chemical vapor deposition, physical vapor deposition
or thermal growth. The above-mentioned conductive material may be filled in the second
crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 240, for example, by electroplating. First, a
seed layer is deposited on the surface of the insulating layer, and then a metal protective
layer is electroplated on the seed layer. During the electroplating process, the metal
layer is also formed on the surface of the wafer body 100, which needs to be removed,
for example, by etching or chemical mechanical polishing.
[0048] When the filling material is one or more of silicon oxide, silicon nitride, silicon
oxynitride, silicon carbide, silicon carbonitride, polyimide and tetraethyl orthosilicate,
it may be filled in by such as chemical vapor deposition or physical vapor deposition
or thermal growth are applied. At the same time, a protective material layer 20 is
also formed on the surface of the first wafer body 400. At this time, the protective
material layer 20 may be removed or may not be removed according to actual needs.
Further as shown in FIG. 13, an air gaps 250 may be formed within the protective material
filled in the second crack-stopping through-silicon-via 240.
[0049] In the case of more layers of stacked wafers, based on the double-wafer stack structure
provided with the first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 230 and the second crack-stopping
through-silicon-vias 240, each additional stacked layer of wafer may be stacked first
and then subject to forming the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias. Such process
can simplify the manufacturing process and improve the production efficiency.
[0050] As shown in FIG. 12, the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200 are formed on both
sides of the scribe lane 120 along the extension direction of the scribe lane 120.
Of course, in practical applications, the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200
may also be provided on only one side of the scribe lane 120. The examples of the
present disclosure are not limited to these modes. The crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
200 include continuously distributed through-silicon-vias or separated distributed
through-silicon-vias. Multiple rows of crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200 may
be formed on one side of the scribe lane 120. The width L of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
200 ranges from 2 µm to 20 µm, and the depth S of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
200 ranges from 15 µm to 150 µm. When there are multiple rows of crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
200 on one side of the scribe lane 120, the width L of the entire area of the through-silicon-vias
ranges from 2 µm to 20 µm. The width of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200
refers to the distance between the two sidewalls of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
200 parallel to the scribe line 120.
[0051] As shown in FIG. 14 herein, multiple rows of dicing through-silicon-vias 200 may
be provided on one side of the scribe lane 120 and the multiple rows of dicing through-silicon-vias
200 may be arranged in parallel in the scribe lane 120. Multiple rows of crack-stopping
through-silicon-vias can further ease the dicing stress.
[0052] The wafer manufacturing method provided by the examples of the present disclosure
effectively prevented the damage of the die regions 110 caused by the dicing stress
during wafer dicing by providing the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200, which
are filled with the protective material and arranged along both sides the scribe lane
120. Thus, the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200 can effectively reduce the
width of the scribe lane 120, and facilitate the miniaturization of the scribe lane
120, thereby improving the resultant wafer utilization rate, and ultimately leading
to cost reduction of the chip.
[0053] The exemplary examples also provide a wafer. As shown in FIG. 4, the wafer includes
a wafer body 100 and crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200. The wafer body 100 is
provided with a scribe channel 120 for dicing. 120. The crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
200 are provided along a side portion of the scribe lane 120 and filled with a protective
material.
[0054] The wafer provided by the examples of the present disclosure prevents the damage
on die regions 110 caused by the dicing stress during wafer dicing by the crack-stopping
through-silicon-vias 200 filled with protective material formed along both sides of
the scribe lane 120. Thus, the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200 can effectively
reduce the width of the scribe lane 120, and facilitate the miniaturization of the
scribe lane 120, thereby improving the effective utilization rate of the wafer.
[0055] The wafer body 100 can be divided into a scribe lane 120 and a die region 110. During
dicing, a dicing knife acts on the scribe lane 120. while the die region 110 is retained.
The wafer body 100 may be a silicon substrate including a silicon epitaxial layer,
silicon on an insulator layer, etc., or a substrate of other semiconductor material
such as GaN, or an intrinsic semiconductor substrate, or a N-type doped or P-type
doped semiconductor substrate, however the examples of the present disclosure are
not limited thereto. A dielectric layer may be disposed on the substrate. The material
of the dielectric layer may be one or more of silicon oxide, silicon nitride, and
silicon oxynitride. In specific implementation, the dielectric layer may be formed
by a method such as chemical vapor deposition, atomic layer deposition and the like.
It is understandable that the dielectric layer may be a single layer of insulating
material, or may be multiple stacked layers of same or different insulating materials.
[0056] The disclosed crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200 are formed along the extension
direction of both sides of the scribe lane 120. Of course, in practical applications,
the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200 may also be provided on one side of the
scribe lane 120. The examples of the present disclosure are not limited to these modes.
The crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200 include continuously distributed through-silicon
vias or separately distributed through-silicon vias. Multiple rows of crack-stopping
through-silicon-vias 200 may be formed on one side of the scribe lane 120. The width
L of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200 is ranging from 2 µm to 20 µm, and
the depth S of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200 is ranging from 15 µm to
150 µm. When there are multiple rows of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200
on one side of the scribe lane 120, the total width L of the entire area of the crack-stopping
through-silicon-vias is ranging from 2 µm to 20 µm. The width of the crack-stopping
through-silicon-vias 200 refers to the distance between the two sidewalls of the crack-stopping
through-silicon-vias 200 parallel to the scribe line 120.
[0057] The protective material may include one or more of copper, tungsten, aluminum, tantalum,
titanium, tantalum nitride, titanium nitride, silicon oxide, silicon nitride, silicon
oxynitride, silicon carbide, silicon carbon nitride, polyimide, and tetraethyl orthosilicate.
Further, an air gap 250 may be provided inside the crack-stopping through-silicon-via
200.
[0058] When the protective material is one or more of conductive materials such as copper,
tungsten, aluminum, tantalum, titanium, tantalum nitride and titanium nitride, the
crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200 may include an insulating layer and a protective
material layer. The insulating layer is between the sidewalls of through-vias on the
wafer body 100 and the protective material. Before filling the protective material,
an insulating layer may be formed firstly on the through-via sidewalls and the first
surface of the wafer body 100. The insulating layer can be formed by such as chemical
vapor deposition, physical vapor deposition or thermal growth. The above-mentioned
conductive material is filled in the through-silicon-vias by such as electroplating.
Firstly, a seed layer is deposited on the insulating layer, and a metal protective
layer is electroplated on the seed layer.
[0059] When the filling material is one or more of silicon oxide, silicon nitride, silicon
oxynitride, silicon carbide, silicon carbonitride, polyimide and tetraethyl orthosilicate,
it may be filled by chemical vapor deposition or physical vapor deposition or thermal
growth. At the same time, a protective material layer 20 is formed on the first surface
of the wafer body 100. At this time, the protective material layer may be removed
or not be removed according to actual needs. Further, an air gap 250 may be formed
inside the protective material filled in the blind via 210.
[0060] The wafer disclosed by the examples of the disclosure is provided with the crack-stopping
through-silicon-vias 200 which are filled in with the protective material and disposed
on both sides of the scribe lane 120, such that the die region 110 is protected from
being damaged by the dicing stress during wafer dicing. Thus, the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
200 can effectively reduce the width of the scribe lane 120 and facilitate the miniaturization
of the scribe lane 120, thereby improving the effective utilization rate of the wafer,
and reducing the chip cost.
[0061] The exemplary examples also provide a semiconductor device, which comprises multiple
layers of aforementioned wafers which are stacked. Each layer of the wafer is provided
with crack-stopping through-silicon-vias 200 on both sides of the scribe lane 120.
The positions of the scribe lanes 120 of the layers of wafers align to each other.
After the multiple layers of wafers are stacked, the projections of the scribe lanes
120 of the multiple layers of wafers overlap on any one of the wafers. As the stacked
wafers are cut along the scribe lane 120, a plurality of stacked dies is obtained.
[0062] Those skilled in the art will easily think of other solutions of the present disclosure
after considering the specification and practicing the disclosure herein. This application
is intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptive changes of the present disclosure.
These variations, uses, or adaptive changes follow the general principles of the present
disclosure and include common knowledge or conventional technical means in the technical
field not disclosed in the present disclosure. The description and the examples are
only regarded as exemplary examples, and the true scope and spirit of the present
disclosure are indicated by the appended claims.
1. A wafer manufacturing method, comprising:
providing a wafer body, on which a scribe lane for dicing is provided; and
forming crack-stopping through-silicon-vias on a side portion of the scribe lane,
wherein the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias are filled with a protective material.
2. The wafer manufacturing method of claim 1, wherein forming the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
on a side portion of the scribe lane comprises the steps of:
forming blind vias on the side portion of the scribe lane from a first surface of
the wafer body;
filling the protective material into the blind vias; and
thinning the wafer body from a second surface opposite to the first surface of the
wafer body until the blind vias are exposed.
3. The wafer manufacturing method of claim 1, wherein forming the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
on a side portion of the scribe lane comprises the steps of:
forming first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias on a side portion of a scribe lane
of a first wafer body;
filling the protective material into the first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias;
forming second crack-stopping through-silicon-vias on a side portion of a scribe lane
of a second wafer body at positions aligned with the first crack-stopping through-silicon-vias,
wherein the first wafer body and the second wafer body are stacked; and
filling the protective material into the second crack-stopping through-silicon-vias.
4. The wafer manufacturing method of claim 1, wherein forming the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
on a side portion of the scribe lane comprises forming the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
on both sides along an extension direction of the scribe lane.
5. The wafer manufacturing method of claim 4, wherein the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
comprise continuously distributed or separately distributed through-silicon-vias.
6. The wafer manufacturing method of claim 4, wherein two or more rows of the crack-stopping
through-silicon-vias are formed on one side of the scribe lane.
7. The wafer manufacturing method of claim 1, wherein a width of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
is in a range from 2 microns to 20 microns, and a depth of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
is in a range from 15 microns to 150 microns.
8. The wafer manufacturing method of claim 1, wherein the protective material comprises
one or more selected from copper, tungsten, aluminum, tantalum, titanium, tantalum
nitride, titanium nitride, silicon oxide, silicon nitride, silicon oxynitride, silicon
carbide, silicon carbonitride, polyimide and tetraethyl orthosilicate.
9. The wafer manufacturing method according to claim 8, wherein an air gap is provided
in one of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias.
10. A wafer, comprising:
a wafer body, on which a scribe lane for dicing is provided; and
crack-stopping through-silicon-vias provided on a side portion of the scribe lane
and filled with a protective material.
11. The wafer of claim 10, wherein the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias are formed
on both sides along an extension direction of the scribe lane.
12. The wafer of claim 11, wherein the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias comprise continuously
distributed or separately distributed through-silicon-vias.
13. The wafer of claim 11, wherein the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias are formed
to two or more rows on one side of the scribe lane.
14. The wafer according to claim 10, wherein a width of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
is in a range from 2 microns to 20 microns, and a depth of the crack-stopping through-silicon-vias
is in a range from 15 microns to 150 microns.
15. The wafer of claim 10, wherein the protective material comprises one or more selected
from copper, tungsten, aluminum, tantalum, titanium, tantalum nitride, titanium nitride,
silicon oxide, silicon nitride, silicon oxynitride, silicon carbide, silicon carbonitride,
polyimide and tetraethyl orthosilicate.
16. The wafer of claim 15, wherein an air gap is provided in one of the crack-stopping
through-silicon-vias.
17. A semiconductor device, comprising two or more layers of wafers according to claim
10, wherein said two or more layers of wafers are stacked.